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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to feel like cancelling this weekend visit after a guy I met abroad has cooled off?

217 replies

LemonWriter · 13/05/2025 13:03

Four weeks ago, I met a guy in Thailand. We clicked, spent three great days together, and stayed in touch. We live a four-hour flight apart. I jokingly said he should move here, and he actually booked flights for this weekend to visit.

He deleted Tinder first, and said he felt crazy falling for a girl he hardly knows. I’m fully aware of love-bombing and kept my guard up, but did reciprocate his actions by deleting dating apps and removing men I’ve dated off social media.

Lately, I’ve noticed a shift: fewer texts, hours between replies, and some messages unread. I found he’d liked another girl’s Instagram (she was also in Thailand, but lives even further away). So I messaged him, said I was excited but concerned about the recent shift in communication, and asked for honesty.

He admitted he had cold feet, felt he'd rushed things, and was overwhelmed by the idea of relocating down the line, even though he’d joined a local bike group in my area on his own. All of these things were said in jest as opposed to this must happen. He followed by saying I deserve someone who is head over heels for me ALL the time and feels like failed me, but still wants to visit to "see if the flame is still there."

I’m frustrated I had to dig this out of him. He’s 27 and says he's just inexperienced and not good at expressing feelings, but that’s an explanation, not an excuse. He said the fact we haven’t seen each other in four weeks contributes to it, but also given the geography, distance will be part of the package initially. If I hadn’t messaged, would he have just visited, slept with me, and ghosted?

Now I’m torn. Part of me wants to cancel and make a point, not out of spite, but because I’m no longer excited and don’t want to waste emotional energy. But friends say it’s understandable he has cold feet and that I should give him a chance.

AIBU to feel like backing out now, even though I was originally excited and he’s already booked flights?

OP posts:
WinWhenTheyreSinging · 13/05/2025 14:13

I know someone said the worst thing I can do is waste a weekend, but it’s also knowing it is essentially a make or break visit so it’s hard to totally reframe it as low pressure!

But why on earth would it have to be 'make or break', it's only the second time you will have met the bloody man? Nothing needs to be serious.

Just have a fun weekend and then decide whether you want to continue actually getting to know each other or not, because neither of you have any clue what the other is really like at the moment.

Annascaul · 13/05/2025 14:13

LemonWriter · 13/05/2025 13:54

I’m trying to figure this out, I’m assuming his job will pay for his return flight (he’s due onsite) or it’s because he knew he has cold feet and didn’t want to invest anymore money.

What? If his employer wants him back badly enough, they’ll pay for his flight? Confused
This is getting more insane by the minute.

WinWhenTheyreSinging · 13/05/2025 14:14

Oh, and if you do meet up, don't just spend the weekend in bed - you'll only be back to where you are next time.

dogcatkitten · 13/05/2025 14:19

Just meet up and see how you feel, it may all just feel flat and not the same or you may find you pick up where you were. Either way you will know. If you just back out you will never know, after 4 weeks apart and really hardly knowing each other you are both going to feel a bit like this is really a stupid idea, but it may not be.

Springtime43 · 13/05/2025 14:22

I'm agreeing with the poster who suggests making an exit with your dignity intact. Its so easy to get swept away, no judgement from me.

Cucy · 13/05/2025 14:25

You both got caught up in the moment and were blindsided by amazing sex and wild dreams.

It is very normal for him, who is coming a long way and spending a lot of money, to now have a reality check and think you’ve both been a bit hasty.

I think you were very silly to have told people about him and I think you’re now being petty by wanting to punish him by not showing up etc.

You do need to face reality and realise both of your actions were a bit silly and wanting to relocate after 3 days of knowing each other was never going to happen.
But I wouldn’t regret it or feel ashamed about it because you both had a great time which is all that matters.

Give him a ring and say how both of you got swept up in it all and both agree to just slow down a bit.
Tell him that you’re excited to see him and have a fun weekend with him and whatever happens in the future will happen.

Have a wild, fun weekend with him and don’t put pressure on each other about the future.
Focus on the now.

It may be that you are soul mates and move in together etc or it may be that you had a couple of weekends of fun and then called it a day - either way it’s ok because you’re both enjoying yourselves.

Wishimaywishimight · 13/05/2025 14:28

Annascaul · 13/05/2025 13:19

This is a Take a Break sadface tale in the making.

Add in 'falling pregnant' when he visits and you've got yourself a story🫣

Sugarloading · 13/05/2025 14:29

Some holiday romances do turn into marriages tbf but the way this is going I don’t really see it. Sounds like he’s got cold feet and the spark has worn off now.

It would be difficult being in a LDR with someone who is blowing hot and cold and not communicating as well as you’d like.

I think you should just say you don’t particularly want him to visit anymore and then he can do whatever he wants with the flight /accommodation.

I don’t understand about the one way flight though? Why would his work pay for him to come back if he was due on site in whatever country he stays?

Sugarloading · 13/05/2025 14:34

For the pp advising Op to have a wild weekend IMO that isn’t going to work. Please be mindful that not everyone is up for casual encounters and judging from some of OPs post it will likely lead to her feeling even worse if it doesn’t work out .

Now I’m torn. Part of me wants to cancel and make a point, not out of spite, but because I’m no longer excited and don’t want to waste emotional energy.

I think once you start seeing someone as “the one” or having great potential to be, it’s hard for many (not all) women to go back to thinking of them as a NSA fling.

She should make a clean break or at the most meet up for a coffee if he decides to come to the UK anyway.

MeMyselfandMN · 13/05/2025 14:35

Wishimaywishimight · 13/05/2025 14:28

Add in 'falling pregnant' when he visits and you've got yourself a story🫣

Twins, natch. 👶👶

BeADinosaur · 13/05/2025 14:36

@LemonWriter , you've said he is 27, but how old are you?

This looks like a typical holiday romance scammer if I'm honest.

Sugarloading · 13/05/2025 14:36

Op protect your feelings, body and access to your life! Not all and sundry should be invited in like a drive thru.

This.

ItGhoul · 13/05/2025 14:38

If someone I'd spent a couple of days with on holiday four weeks ago was monitoring my Instagram to check I'd liked a post by another man, I would be blocking them and running for the hills.

Maybebaybee · 13/05/2025 14:39

I'd give him a chance, relax into it and see how the weekend goes, with zero expectations :)

LemonWriter · 13/05/2025 14:40

Sugarloading · 13/05/2025 14:29

Some holiday romances do turn into marriages tbf but the way this is going I don’t really see it. Sounds like he’s got cold feet and the spark has worn off now.

It would be difficult being in a LDR with someone who is blowing hot and cold and not communicating as well as you’d like.

I think you should just say you don’t particularly want him to visit anymore and then he can do whatever he wants with the flight /accommodation.

I don’t understand about the one way flight though? Why would his work pay for him to come back if he was due on site in whatever country he stays?

He works offshore and therefore his employer pays for his flight to and from site so long as it’s within a specific region. He actually mentioned that his job, being away for two weeks at a time, has caused breakdowns in past relationships, which did raise a flag for me. Especially because we live quite far apart already, so the reality of how little we'd see each other (every 3–4 weeks at best) was always going to be a challenge.

We both said we weren’t keen on long-distance, and I think that’s what led to the early conversation about relocation if things went well. But looking back, we definitely got swept up in the moment, intense feelings, holiday setting, future talk too soon. I was slower to open up, but once I did and started matching his energy, he pulled away, which has left me feeling quite off-balance.

At this point I’m just trying to figure out whether there’s still value in meeting this weekend, or if I should just acknowledge that reality has kicked in for both of us and it's probably run its course.

Some of the advice received is encouraging of meeting up to assess while others agree to end things with dignity. I think it’s a decision I need to sleep on!

OP posts:
tripleginandtonic · 13/05/2025 14:41

He's not ghosted you. You're putting pressure on him. Let him come, see what happens.

LemonWriter · 13/05/2025 14:41

BeADinosaur · 13/05/2025 14:36

@LemonWriter , you've said he is 27, but how old are you?

This looks like a typical holiday romance scammer if I'm honest.

I’m 25. I can assure you neither of us are a scammer as no visas are required for either of our countries.

OP posts:
OhBow · 13/05/2025 14:44

This "I was slower to open up, but once I did and started matching his energy, he pulled away" makes it sound like he was just trying to win you over for an ego boost. I could be wrong though.

Flyswats · 13/05/2025 14:45

I think you're wasting your time. I would just nip this one in the bud as previously suggested by others. If he lives that far away you're not going to be able to see how it goes / how you get on because every meet up is gong to be a snatched few days, completely unrealistic with your every day life.

kittensinthekitchen · 13/05/2025 14:47

You say he would go "days" without responding. You've only known him days! When did his communication start to change?

LemonWriter · 13/05/2025 14:47

Sugarloading · 13/05/2025 14:34

For the pp advising Op to have a wild weekend IMO that isn’t going to work. Please be mindful that not everyone is up for casual encounters and judging from some of OPs post it will likely lead to her feeling even worse if it doesn’t work out .

Now I’m torn. Part of me wants to cancel and make a point, not out of spite, but because I’m no longer excited and don’t want to waste emotional energy.

I think once you start seeing someone as “the one” or having great potential to be, it’s hard for many (not all) women to go back to thinking of them as a NSA fling.

She should make a clean break or at the most meet up for a coffee if he decides to come to the UK anyway.

Edited

Thanks for this! I really appreciate your tone because it is what I’ve been wrestling with. I’m actually fine with flings and casual encounters (and that’s what I originally thought this was), but the way he came on so strong—talking about relocating, planning trips, making big statement, changed the emotional tone of the whole thing.

Normally I can compartmentalise pretty well, but in this case I just don’t think I could go back to seeing him as a NSA thing, especially after the intensity. That’s why I planned a full weekend of activities, to take the focus off just being in a hotel room, because I know I’d feel worse if it ended with just sex and silence after.
I think what’s really unsettled me is the thought that if I hadn’t said anything, he may have come here, acted all fine, slept with me, and then slowly ghosted. That would’ve really hurt, feeling used and misled.

OP posts:
Cucy · 13/05/2025 14:48

At this point I’m just trying to figure out whether there’s still value in meeting this weekend, or if I should just acknowledge that reality has kicked in for both of us and it's probably run its course.

I don’t understand why you’re being so intense still.

You had sex with him after knowing him first less than 3 days (not judging).
You both like each other and find each other attractive.

So why not just have a fun weekend with him and stop trying to work out whether you’re going to be together forever or not.

Just have fun together and afterwards talk about how realistic the situation is and the next steps.

It’s likely that this will need to happen a couple more times at least for you both to decide whether it’s a realistic possibility.

Having a fun weekend with a hot guy that you get on well with is never a wasted weekend.

Flyswats · 13/05/2025 14:50

I also think he's been partially ghosting you because he's likely spending time with someone else. He's trying to keep all his options open but he's not very good at it.

MemorableTrenchcoat · 13/05/2025 14:51

piehj · 13/05/2025 13:23

A cyclist OP? God no, red flag, RUN.

Yawn.

kittensinthekitchen · 13/05/2025 14:53

LemonWriter · 13/05/2025 14:41

I’m 25. I can assure you neither of us are a scammer as no visas are required for either of our countries.

What countries are they? Are either of them particularly known for stereotypical holiday scammers?

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